Documents in this repo are a collection of ideas. They are not necessarily a formal design for a feature, nor are they docs for a feature, nor are they a roadmap for future features.
This is a git repository for doing design review on enhancements to OpenStack Swift. This provides an ability to ensure that everyone has signed off on the approach to solving a problem early on.
The structure of the repository is as follows:
specs/ done/ in_progress/
Implemented specs will be moved to :ref:`done-directory` once the associated code has landed.
First propose a spec to the in_progress
directory so that it can be
reviewed. Reviewers adding a positive +1/+2 review in gerrit are promising
that they will review the code when it is proposed. Spec documents should be
approved and merged as soon as possible, and spec documents in the
in_progress
directory can be updated as often as needed. Iterate on it.
- Have an idea
- Propose a spec
- Reviewers review the spec. As soon as 2 core reviewers like something, merge it. Iterate on the spec as often as needed, and keep it updated.
- Once there is agreement on the spec, write the code.
- As the code changes during review, keep the spec updated as needed.
- Once the code lands (with all necessary tests and docs), the spec can be
moved to the
done
directory. If a feature needs a spec, it needs docs, and the docs must land before or with the feature (not after).
- Land quickly: A spec is a living document, and lives in the repository not in gerrit. Potential users, ops and developers will look at http://specs.openstack.org/openstack/swift-specs/ to get an idea of what's being worked on, so they need to be quick to land.
- Initial version is an idea not a technical design: That way the merits of the idea can be discussed and landed and not stuck in gerrit limbo land.
- Second version is an overview of the technical design: This will aid in the technical discussions amongst the community.
- Subsequent versions improve/enhance technical design: Each of these versions should be relatively small patches to the spec to keep rule #1. And keeps the spec up to date with the progress of the implementation.
Naturally you'll want clarifications about the way a spec is written. To ask questions, propose a patch to the spec (via the normal patch proposal tools) with your question or your understanding of the confusing part. That will raise the issue in a patch review and allow everyone to answer or comment.
This is a new way of attempting things, so we're going to be low in process to begin with to figure out where we go from here. Expect some early flexibility in evolving this effort over time.